• Med. Clin. North Am. · Sep 2004

    Review

    The prevention of heart failure in minority communities and discrepancies in health care delivery systems.

    • Clyde W Yancy.
    • The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, TX 75390-9047, USA. clyde.yancy@utsouthwestern.edu
    • Med. Clin. North Am. 2004 Sep 1; 88 (5): 1347xiii1347-68, xii-xiii.

    AbstractThis article discusses risk factors for cardiovascular disease in the minority community, including hypertension, obesity, diabetes,and diet. The minority community exhibits important population differences regarding risk and outcomes for cardiovascular disease. The complete explanation for these differential outcomes is lacking and likely to be multifactorial in origin; however, disparities in health care (differences in the quality of health care that are not due to access-related factors or clinical needs, to preferences, or to the appropriateness of the intervention) may emanate from decisions made by the patient, provider, or health care system. Hypertension as a disease entity is strikingly pathologic in African Americans. Correspondingly, the incidence of cardiovascular mortality due to hypertensive heart disease is fourfold higher in African Americans than in non-Hispanic whites. Hypertension and heart failure can be treated effectively in the minority community with a regimen of agents not dissimilar from that used for the general population. Treatment regimens should be individualized based on the disease presentation, associated comorbidity, and disease severity and not on something as arbitrary as race.

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